Friday, August 28, 2009

The Perfect Pie Crust




Perfect Pie Crusts
By: Allrecipes Staff
Whether you prefer flaky crusts or crispy ones, pie-making is all about technique.
Tricks of the Trade
To keep the crust's edges from getting too dark, cover them with strips of foil or a pie shield during the first half of the baking time.
Use a pie pan that absorbs, rather than reflects, heat: use glass, ceramic, or dull-finished metal pans.
If you own a baking stone or pizza stone, use it. Bake the pie on a cookie sheet to prevent spillovers on the stone. Baking on a stone ensures that the bottom crust on even the juiciest fruit pie will be done when the top is brown.
Double-crust pies need steam vents: it's especially nice if the holes are cut or poked in a decorative pattern.
To add a richer color to a double-crust or lattice-topped pie, brush the top crust with milk or egg wash before baking.
For shine and sparkle, thin a quarter cup of light corn syrup with very hot water. When the pie is done, brush the thinned syrup over the top of the crust. Sprinkle with granulated sugar or decorative sugar. Return the pie to the oven for two to three minutes to let the glaze dry and set.
More Pie Crust Advice
Making a Lattice-Top Pie Crust
Making Fancy Pie Crust Toppers
Double Crust Pie (Video)
More Baking Videos
No matter how good the filling, the crust is the showcase: a good homemade crust takes a pie to new heights.
There are four basic ingredients in a pie crust: flour, fat, water and salt. You can come up with all kinds of tasty variations just by changing your basic ingredients, as long as you stick to the ratio of three parts flour, two parts fat, and one part liquid.
3-2-1 Dough
Flour: For a tender crust, choose a low-protein flour. Pastry flour, with a protein content of about 8-10%, ranks between all-purpose flour and cake flour. All-purpose flour works just fine for pie crusts, while cake flour may lack enough protein to form a workable, elastic dough.
Depending upon your tastes and the recipe, you may substitute nut flours (almond flour or hazelnut flour) or whole wheat pastry flour for part of the mixture.
If you're a novice crust-maker, start with a plain all-purpose or pastry flour dough.
Fat: Flaky crusts can be made from a variety of fats: butter, lard, shortening, duck fat, vegetable oil, or nut oils.
Crusts made with all butter are very flavorful, though they are generally not quite as flaky as crusts made with shortening or lard.
Vegetable shortening pie doughs are easier to work with and hold their shape better than all-butter crusts, but the flavor won't be as rich.
Lard produces the flakiest crust, but processed lard can have a chemical aftertaste. Some butchers or farmers' market stands may sell fresh rendered lard.
Some of the best pie crusts are made with a combination of fats: half butter, for flavor, and half shortening or lard, for flakiness.
Fans of crispier crusts use melted butter or oil for the fat, resulting in a mealier dough that bakes up as a fine-textured, crisp crust.
Liquid: Ice water, fruit juices, egg yolks, sour cream, milk or cream add different flavors and textures to your pie crust.
When adding liquid to the flour and fat mixture, it should be ice-cold in order to keep the pieces of fat cool and separate.
Always add liquid a tablespoon at a time, tossing with the flour mixture.
Humidity can affect dough performance, so you may need less liquid than the recipe calls for.
If your dough becomes too wet, you'll need to add more flour to roll out the crust, throwing off your ratio and resulting in a tough crust.
A little bit of acid--vinegar or lemon juice--helps tenderize the dough and prevents it from oxidizing.
Salt: don't forget to add a pinch of salt to enhance the flavor of your crust.
For a sweeter crust, add a tablespoon or two of confectioners' sugar. Granulated sugar can make the dough sticky and harder to work with.
Other additions: Wheat germ, a pinch of spice, a dash of flavorful liqueur or cold brewed coffee are all good additions to pie crusts.
Butter and lard crust recipes:
Butter Flaky Pie Crust
Alan's Pie Crust
No-Fail Pie Crust II
Flaky Food Processor Pie Crust
More Pie Crust Recipes
Cream cheese, shortening, and oil-based crusts.
Basic Flaky Pie Crust
Oil Pie Crust
Grandma Covington's Cheese Apple Pie Crust
Spiced Pecan Crust
Baker's Secret Pie Crust
Cream Cheese Crust
Healthier Pie Crust
Pastry Techniques
Technique is the most important aspect to making a good pie crust.
All ingredients should be very cold before mixing. Shortening can be kept in the freezer without becoming rock-solid.
When you "cut in" the fat, you want discrete pieces (pea-sized) that don't blend in to the dough as you work it. These flakes of butter will expand and the liquid evaporate during baking, separating the layers of dough into a flaky crust.
Do not overwork the dough. Mix quickly and handle the dough as little as possible. Overworking the dough will cause it to be tough.
Chill the dough in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes before rolling it out. This lets the flour absorb the liquid and helps to prevent stickiness when rolling out the dough. It also allows the gluten (the protein structure) to relax, making it more elastic and less likely to shrink back as you roll it.
Roll the dough out on a lightly floured surface, a pastry cloth, or between two sheets of waxed paper. Roll the dough from the center outward using even, firm strokes. Turning the dough as you work, about an eighth of turn per roll, will help to keep it round.
Use a dry pastry brush or a clean dishtowel to brush off excess flour from the dough.
Once the dough is rolled to the proper thickness, fold it in half or roll it around your rolling pin to lift it into the pie pan. Gently press the dough down into the bottom edges of the pan. You can use kitchen shears or a paring knife to trim the crust to about a ¾ inch overhang.
After the rolled-out dough has been transferred to the pie pan, let it relax in the refrigerator for another 20-30 minutes before filling. This will prevent the dough from shrinking during baking.
Before pouring the filling into the unbaked pie crust, you can brush the bottom and sides of the unbaked pie crust with lightly beaten egg white or melted jelly. This will help create a seal to keep the crust crisp.
To ensure that the crust stays even crisper, par-bake the pie crust before adding the filling. (This is, of course, only an option for crumb-topped pies, not latticed or double-crust pies, in which the top and bottom crusts need to be sealed.)
When pre-baking ("blind baking") a pie crust, line it with foil or parchment paper and fill it with pie weights, dried beans or rice, or a jar's worth of loose change. Bake until the rim just begins to color. Remove the weights and carefully prick the bottom and sides with a fork to prevent air bubbles. Return it to the oven and continue baking until pale golden. Brush with egg wash, if desired, and bake a few more minutes to create a seal.
Making a Pie Crust, Step by Step
Pie Troubleshooting Guide
Pie Crust Recipe Collection

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